LOS ANGELES, CA.- The Los Angeles County Museum of Art is presenting the U.S. premiere of David Hockney: 82 Portraits and 1 Still-life. On view April 15July 29, 2018, this exhibition features recent portraits that revisit a genre that has been a major part of the artists long career. Vibrant and full of life, these paintings, which Hockney considers a single body of work, were executed between 2013 and 2016 in the artists Hollywood Hills studio. The exhibition provides insight into the artists life, his connections to the art world, and the people who have crossed his path recently.
For each portrait Hockney asked the sitter for a commitment of three days, which the artist has described as a 20-hour exposure. The portraits are painted on canvases of the same size (48 × 36 inches), with each subject seated in the same chair against a similar backdrop. Among the portraits are those of John Baldessari, Stephanie Barron, Douglas Baxter, Celia Birtwell, Dagny Corcoran, Edith Devaney, Larry Gagosian, Frank Gehry, Peter Goulds, Ayn Grinstein, Barry Humphries, Rita Pynoos, Joan Agajanian Quinn, Sir Norman Rosenthal, Jacob Rothschild, and Benedikt Taschen, which are joined by portraits of Hockneys studio and home staff, children of friends, and Hockneys siblings John and Margaret.
David Hockney: 82 Portraits and 1 Still-life is organized by the Royal Academy of Arts in London in collaboration with LACMA. The exhibition opened in London at the Royal Academy in 2017, and traveled to Venice, Bilbao, and Melbourne. The LACMA presentation, the only U.S. showing of the work, is organized by Stephanie Barron, the museums senior curator of modern art.
This exhibition marks the return of Davids work with painting on canvas and portraiture long an important facet of his celebrated career, said Michael Govan, LACMA CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director. In 1988 LACMA initiated Hockneys first large retrospective and now thirty years later it is so meaningful to present a new body of work featuring Davids personal circle.
Stephanie Barron, senior curator of modern art, shares, As one of the sitters whose portrait is included in the exhibition, I had the chance to witness Hockneys painting process very closely over the course of three days. He observed me closely, worked confidently, quickly, and silently, and managed within the first two hours to capture my pose, clothing, and spirit. Hockneys mastery of portraiture comes through in this remarkably intimate series in which each subject sat in the same chair, in front of the same curtain. Looking at them together we see how marvelously Hockney has captured the individual personalities of his varied subjects.
Born in Bradford, England, in 1937, David Hockney began his career in the 1960s in London, as part of the emerging British Pop art scene. In 1964 he visited Los Angeles for the first time, and in 1979 he moved to L.A., where he established a studio practice. David Hockneys work has been the focus of numerous LACMA exhibitions, including David Hockney: A Retrospective (1988); David Hockney: A Drawing Retrospective (1996); David Hockney Portraits (2006); and an installation of a multi-screen film, David Hockney: Seven Yorkshire Landscape Videos, 2011 (2011). His iconic painting Mulholland Drive: The Road to the Studio (1980) has long been a hallmark of LACMAs collection, and more than 200 of Hockneys paintings, prints, drawings, photographs, and films are in the museums permanent collection.
David Hockney: 82 Portraits and 1 Still-life is arranged chronologically by the date of each portrait. The 82 paintings in the series are considered to be a single body of work and were executed between 2013 and 2016 in the artists Los Angeles studio. In each portrait the subject is seated in the same yellow upholstered chair against a vivid blue background, and all the portraits were painted in acrylic on 48 × 36 canvases. Each portrait was painted over a period of two or three days, which is indicated in their titles.